Word: tow
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...cannot do this work without being at the point of tension," Epps says. "I have to do that for the College. I have to take the risk." Chain of Command The bureaucracy within the College's race relations hierarchy has been steadily developing for the past tow years. This fall, however, Dean of Students Archile C. Epps III has taken on most of the authority for race relations policy, reshaping the committees under his charge...
...difficult to get too huffy about the deal after reading Brian Keenan, Terry Waite and Terry Anderson on their years in chains and filth. Is a hostage worth 300 TOW antitank missiles or 50 Hawks? We know the argument: rewarding terrorism breeds more terrorism. But what if the hostage is your son, brother or husband, suddenly stripped of humanity and lost in a world that reads like Kafka with kaffiyehs...
Apparently, just minutes before, the tugboat MV Mauvilla had had an encounter with the same bridge. Pushing a tow of six barges strapped together, the ship had taken a wrong turn on the Mobile river and strayed into the bayou. In the fog and darkness, however, the barges became unlashed and began drifting. According to expert speculation last week, they may have hit the bridge, which was too low to let them pass. Someone on the tugboat radioed the Coast Guard for help. By then, however, the Sunset Limited roared into sight -- and plunged straight into disaster. The bridge gave...
...difficult to get too huffy about the deal after reading Brian Keenan, Terry Waite and Terry Anderson on their years in chains and filth. Is a hostage worth 300 TOW antitank missiles or 50 Hawks? We know the argument: rewarding terrorism breeds more terrorism. But what if the hostage is your son, brother or husband, suddenly stripped of humanity and lost in a world that reads like Kafka with kaffiyehs...
Harvard University has the choice to support with autonomy one or the other, or both (or neither), of these two entities. These tow distinctive entities share only the common purpose of educating in the contemporary arts, but they possess different audiences (the Harvard undergraduate vs. the general public). One entity (the VES department) is bound and restrained by academic rules and regulations whereas the other (the Carpenter Center) should never be so bound or restrained. The two entities are ideologically, budgetarily, administratively, functionally and physically different. The Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts is for all the visual arts...